IAC-WI

Main Menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Gallery
    • Visuals
  • About
    • Contact

IAC-WI

  • Home
  • News
    • 'Staggering' Iran Toll Drives Up Global Executions: Amnesty

      May 24, 2026
      0
    • Iran’s same-day death sentences show its brutality, again

      May 18, 2026
      0
    • Iran executes two opposition members as judiciary vows 'no leniency'

      April 28, 2026
      0
    • Iran: Seven protesters and dissidents at risk of imminent execution after four ...

      April 2, 2026
      0
    • Gingrich, Ex-Military Leaders Throw Support Behind Iran Opposition Group

      March 28, 2026
      0
    • NCRI Provisional Government Wins Backing Beyond 1,000 International Figures

      March 21, 2026
      0
    • EU designates Iran's Revolutionary Guard a terror group

      February 1, 2026
      0
    • A Nation Past the Point of Return: Iran’s January 2026 Uprising and ...

      January 21, 2026
      0
    • IRGC Commander Admits to the Mass Killing of Civilians

      January 19, 2026
      0
  • Blog
    • A weakened Tehran faces its greatest threat: The Iranian people

      May 24, 2026
      0
    • Iran conducting near-daily prisoner executions in secrecy, say rights groups

      May 8, 2026
      0
    • America's Exit Strategy Is Already Inside Iran

      April 28, 2026
      0
    • Iran’s Execution Machine of Domestic Deterrence

      April 15, 2026
      0
    • The Most Dangerous Kind of War Is One Without Strategy

      April 2, 2026
      0
    • The women-led resistance the Iranian regime fears most

      February 27, 2026
      0
    • Don’t impose another Persian dictatoron a multinational Iran

      February 17, 2026
      0
    • The Iranian regime’s first victims are its own people

      February 5, 2026
      0
    • Neither Shah Nor Supreme Leader: Can Iran's Theocracy Survive a Nation in ...

      January 24, 2026
      0
  • Events
  • Gallery
    • Visuals
  • About
    • Contact
News
Home›News›British Airways and Air France to Suspend Iran Service

British Airways and Air France to Suspend Iran Service

By IAC-WI
August 25, 2018
1776
0
Share:

By Rick Gladstone and Zach Wichter    |   Aug. 23, 2018

Two major European airlines said Thursday that they would suspend service to Tehran next month, a double-punch that underscored the power of reimposed American sanctions on Iran and the limited abilities of others to sidestep them.

The suspensions, by British Airways and Air France, mean at least three large European carriers, which once held out great promise for their Iran business under the now-threatened nuclear agreement, will quit flying to and from the country in September. KLM, the Dutch sister airline of Air France, announced a similar suspension last month.

The moves seemed bound to deepen Iran’s sense of economic isolation, which has worsened considerably in the nearly four months since President Trump scrapped American participation in the nuclear agreement negotiated by the administration of his predecessor, Barack Obama.

Mr. Trump and his aides have warned foreign businesses to steer clear of Iran to avoid reimposed American sanctions, which take full effect in November.

“Drastically reducing direct flights to Europe certainly has a psychological and economic impact,” said Richard Aboulafia, vice president of analysis at Teal Group, an aviation and defense industry consultancy in Fairfax, Va.

Both British Airways and Air France attributed their decisions to a drop in demand that had made the Iran routes unprofitable, and they did not mention the effects of Mr. Trump’s actions. But industry analysts said the primary cause was clear.

“There’s no question that the economic sanctions that have been imposed on Iran are affecting its economy and limit some companies’ ability to do business there,” said Henry Harteveld, founder of Atmosphere Research Group, a travel industry analysis firm in San Francisco. “So I’m sure there’s been a sharp falloff in traffic both originating from Iran as well as traffic from Europe and other international points, including the U.S., going into Iran.”

Mr. Harteveld said a rise in the price of jet fuel might also have played a role. “Jet fuel is like a stern parent,” he said. “It forces a lot of discipline on you as an airline, and routes that are marginal are often scaled down or cut if they’re not meeting profit expectations.”

British Airways said its last round-trip flight between London and Tehran would be Sept. 22-23. In a statement, the airline apologized for “any disruption this may cause to our customers’ travel plans” and said it was arranging re-bookings or refunds.

Air France said it had “decided to early-end the summer season service from Paris to Tehran” starting Sept. 17, “as a result of weak economic performance.” It offered customers rebooking options.

Other foreign-based airlines still provide service to Iran. But the departures of British Airways and Air France will reduce travel options as Britain and France are trying to save the 2015 nuclear agreement, which was intended to end Iran’s economic isolation in exchange for its verifiable pledges of peaceful nuclear development.

“The news that British Airways and Air France will stop flying to Iran is a prestige blow to the government,” said Cliff Kupchan, chairman of the Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy in Washington. “Major carriers from two nations that support the nuclear agreement are no longer serving Tehran.”

Iran’s official media appeared mostly to play down the airline service suspensions. But Press TV, a state-run news website, quoted Iran’s ambassador to Britain, Hamid Baeidinejad, as saying that there was high demand for travel to Iran and that the British Airways decision was “regrettable.”

Mr. Trump, who has described the nuclear agreement as a disaster, even though most countries including the United States’ European allies have said it was working, announced in May that the United States was withdrawing from the accord.

The Trump administration has since begun reimposing suspended American sanctions on Iran, including severe restrictions on Iranian banking, auto making and — most significantly — sales of petroleum, Iran’s vital export.

Under the reimposed sanctions, companies that do business with Iran risk penalties in the far larger American market, which has intimidated big multinational companies that depend on their connections with the United States. Many have withdrawn from Iran or suspended plans to invest there.

The impact has helped to severely weaken Iran’s currency, the rial, which has made imports in Iran and travel abroad for Iranians far more costly.

“The market is punishing Iran,” Mr. Kupchan said, “which for better or worse is exactly what Trump wants.”

 

Previous Article

Iran Exploits the Global Financial System for ...

Next Article

IRAN UNTOLD STORY – EPISODE 1: FBI ...

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • News

    How Iran pays mafia hitmen to carry out assassinations in Europe

    June 1, 2025
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    In Violation of Nuclear Deal, Iran Ships Soldiers to Syria on Commercial Flights

    August 30, 2017
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    Prisoners in 19 Iranian prisons have declared a hunger strike

    August 30, 2024
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    Iran talks unlikely to yield good deal, Menendez says

    May 9, 2022
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    Echoes of the 1980s: A Warning from a Former Political Prisoner

    August 23, 2025
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    In Iran, Religious Minority Children Are To Stay Silent If They Want To Study

    October 18, 2019
    By IAC-WI

You may interested

  • Blog

    Risking revival of unrest, Iran rulers tighten curbs on dissent

  • News

    Rouhani Government “Closed Seven Million” Websites in First Term

  • News

    The Iranian Regime is Primed for Total Collapse

Latest Tweets

Tweets by @OrgIAC
  • LATEST REVIEWS

  • TOP REVIEWS

Timeline

  • May 24, 2026

    ‘Staggering’ Iran Toll Drives Up Global Executions: Amnesty

  • May 24, 2026

    A weakened Tehran faces its greatest threat: The Iranian people

  • May 18, 2026

    Iran’s same-day death sentences show its brutality, again

  • May 8, 2026

    Iran conducting near-daily prisoner executions in secrecy, say rights groups

  • April 28, 2026

    Iran executes two opposition members as judiciary vows ‘no leniency’

Latest Comments

Find us on Facebook

About us

logo

Iranian American Community of Wisconsin (IAC-WI) is an all-volunteer, non-profit, serving the Iranian Americans in Wisconsin. We are inspired by Iranian people's desire for a democratic, secular, non-nuclear republic Iran that embraces a peaceful and prosperous Middle East.

Speaker Paul Ryan “Nowruz”

REP. GROTHMAN (R-WI)

Follow us

  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Home